Research paper topics, free example research papers

For Many People In The 1930s Living Conditions Were Not As - 1,218 words
For many people in the 1930s living conditions
were not as adequate as they needed to be. The
stock market had just crashed in 1928, and the US
was in the midst of the Great Depression. Many
people suffered from lack of money, and many
others suffered from lack of food. One group of
people who suffered greatly during this time
period were the southern share croppers. Factors
that caused the substandard living conditions of
the southern share croppers in the 1930s include
lack of education, poor health care, and
inadequate living facilities. The first factor
that caused the substandard living conditions of
the southern share croppers was their lack of
education. There were several reasons the ...
Related: living conditions, stock market, great depression, health care, clothing

In The Early 1900s The Living Conditions Under Which Many African Americans Were Living - 686 words
In the early 1900s the living conditions under
which many African Americans were living was poor.
There was racial segregation, the passing of Jim
Crow laws, sharecropping, and linchings. Africans
were treated unequal and were highly discriminated
against. African children were least likely to
attend school, get high or well paying jobs, and
raise a family out of poverty. There were few
activists in this time period for the treatment of
Africans, but two young men stepped forward. Du
Bois and Washington, both from different
backgrounds but both out to help the African race.
Du Bois was born into a free family and makes
certain demands to improve the living for his
race, while Washington was ...
Related: african, african children, living conditions, more successful, racial segregation

Africans Were Kidnapped And Taken Aboard Ships To Be Transported To Various Places - 446 words
1. Africans were kidnapped and taken aboard ships
to be transported to various places. From reading
Equianos memoir I gathered that the slaves were
terrified. They had never seen whites before, nor
did they speak the language of their captors, so
they had no idea of their destiny. Equiano tells
us the harsh conditions aboard the ship. The
slaves were shackled together. Equiano almost
makes the reader hear the clanking of the chains
and the gasps for clean air. The ships were
grossly over crowded and the heat of the ship was
almost unbearable. Many were sick and undoubtedly
terrified of what was to happen next. When they
arrived to their destination the slaves were
auctioned off as if they we ...
Related: aboard, kidnapped, slave ship, belief system, slave trade

A Child Called It - 893 words
A Child Called It Title: A Child Called It Author:
Dave Pelzer Number of pages: 181 Date of
Publication: 1993 Summary: A Child Called It is a
story based on a real life boys tribulations with
his mothers shocking abuse. When he was younger
Dave and his family were considered the perfect
family. Then, all of a sudden his mother and
father started drinking and had problems in their
relationship. Dave started getting the worst
treatment imaginable. His mother all of a sudden
treated him as a nobody or an It. His father
wouldnt do anything about it and it made Dave hate
him. She did many horrible things to him that he
will never forget. He had two other brothers but
they didnt get any of their m ...
Related: child called 'it', living conditions, book reports, never knew, floor

A Dream Deferred - 898 words
A Dream Deferred A Dream Deferred What happens to
a dream deferred? (a) Does it dry up (b) like a
raisin in the sun? (c) Or fester like a sore- (d)
And then run? (c) Does it stink like rotten meat?
(e) Or crust and sugar over- like a syrupy sweet?
(e) Maybe it just sags (f) like a heavy load. (g)
Or does it explode? (g) Born in Joplin, Missouri,
James Langston Hughes (1902-1967) was born into an
abolitionist family. As the grandson of James
Mercer Langston, the first Black American to be
elected to public office in 1855, Hughes attended
Central High School in Cleveland, Ohio, but began
writing poetry in the eighth grade, and was
selected as Class Poet. His father didn't think he
would be abl ...
Related: deferred, dream, dream deferred, raisin in the sun, james langston hughes

A Modest Proposal - 1,260 words
A Modest Proposal Unlike most essays, Jonathan
Swift's A Modest Proposal is written for the
reader to see through what the narrator is
expressing. The narrator does not want the reader
to agree that the solution to overpopulation and
poverty in Ireland is to eat babies, he wants the
reader to see there needs to be a practical
solution. By stating the advantages and objections
to his proposal, using ironic words and phrases,
he directs the reader not to see the apparent, but
the implicit. Swift's narrative voice
metaphorically compares the Irish to pigs and
cows, which implies the Irish are being treated
subhumanly. Although something seems one way to
the narrator, Jonathan Swift wants the re ...
Related: modest, modest proposal, proposal, harcourt brace, young children

A Slaves Life - 1,645 words
A Slave's Life Imagine, if you will, rising
earlier than the sun, eating a mere "snack"-
lacking essentially all nutritional value - and
trekking miles to toil in the unforgiving climate
of the southern states, and laboring until the sun
once again slipped under the horizon. Clad only in
the rags your master provided (perhaps years ago),
you begin walking in the dark the miles to your
"home." As described by the writers Jacob Stroyer
and Josiah Henson, this "home" was actually a mere
thatched roof, that you built with your own hands,
held up by pathetic walls, over a dirt floor and
you shared this tiny space with another family.
Upon return to "home," once again you eat the
meager rations yo ...
Related: slave labor, created equal, founding fathers, significant other, livestock

Abstract - 744 words
Abstract Animal experimentation has been going on
for a while now and people have been protesting
against it since it has begun. It seems now days
there are more cons for animal experiments because
of how it has become a popular topic to this day.
The pros seem to think that animal experiments are
necessary for living a healthy life. With all of
the debating going on, animal experimentation may
be halted. Animal Experimentation Should animal
experimentation be regulated? Do animals have the
same rights we do? These are questions that are of
much debate. Animals are used in experiments all
of the time, whether they are testing a new drug,
or testing their reactions to a new fabric
softener. B ...
Related: abstract, human ethics, human responsibility, animal testing, peta

African American Community - 3,040 words
... stood that his name would not appear in the
program credits or advertising. For twenty weeks,
the Mahalia Jackson Show ran on television for a
half-hour each episode. Beginning in September
1954, the show did not last very long. Mahalias
show featured her singing traditional gospels and
spirituals with a few miscellaneous songs but the
show was missing a major component. (2) The show
was in need of a sponsor and began to go out of
business. The show went from thirty minutes
airtime to ten minutes and eventually ended in
February 1955. This was not the end of Mahalia's
television appearances however. The TV station,
WBBM-TV of Chicago asked Mahalia to be a guest on
their program, "In Town ...
Related: african, african american, american, american community, race relations

African American Heritage In Chicago - 702 words
African American Heritage In Chicago A History of
African American Heritage in Chicago The massive
exodus to the north began in 1915; a population of
people weary of pervasive hostility and constraint
in their former lives, fleeing a social system
comprised of miserable oppression and repeated
violence. The primary cities for resettlement
became New York and Chicago, metropolises humming
with the vigor of big-city life and the excitement
of a new beginning. When the Chicago Commission
asked African American migrants in interviews on
Race Relations in 1922 why they came to Chicago,
responses were similar. Im looking for better
wages. I wanted to get away from the South, and to
earn more money ...
Related: african, african american, american, american community, american heritage, american population, american youth

American History - 1,092 words
American History Although Britians North American
colonies had enjoyed considerable prosperity
during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth
centuries, beginning with the Stamp Act in 1765
the British government began to put pressures on
them, largely in the form of taxes and new trade
restrictions, that drew increasingly resistance.
(Out of Many, 133) One big reason that the loyal
British citizens in North America were transformed
into rebels is because of the taxes. It was not
the prices of the tax, because Britain had one of
the lowest taxes in the world at that time, it was
the fact that Parliament had so much
representation over them. The British empire was a
mercantile market. They ...
Related: american, american colonies, american history, american revolution, history, north american

Analysis Of The New Singles - 685 words
Analysis Of The New Singles The article that will
be evaluated in this particular essay is taken
from Newsweeks Society and Arts (dating August
14,2000), which is titled as The New Singles and
it is written by Carla Power in cooperation with
Antonia Francis, in Paris and Stefan Theil, in
Berlin. As it can be understood from the title it
is about the people in Europe, who prefer living
alone. Throughout the article, different
lifestyles and different choices of people, who
are living alone, are reflected. While doing that,
the reasons and the outcomes of living alone are
given with some additional information including,
statistics and research results. The article shows
that there is a certai ...
Related: living conditions, business culture, social issues, tough, accurate

Analysis On Bulgaria - 4,272 words
Analysis On Bulgaria External historical events
often changed Bulgaria's national boundaries in
its first century of existence, natural terrain
features defined most boundaries after 1944, and
no significant group of people suffered serious
economic hardship because of border delineation.
Postwar Bulgaria contained a large percentage of
the ethnic Bulgarian people, although numerous
migrations into and out of Bulgaria occurred at
various times. None of the country's borders was
officially disputed in 1991, although nationalist
Bulgarians continued to claim that Bulgaria's
share of Macedonia--which it shared with both
Yugoslavia and Greece--was less than just because
of the ethnic connection ...
Related: bulgaria, district court, separation of church and state, public transportation, music

Asian Affirmation And Islamic Resurgence - 1,053 words
Asian Affirmation And Islamic Resurgence Two
civilizations that were challenging the theory of
Western supremacy and stressing the importance of
their own culture in relation to that of the West
were the Asian and Islamic civilizations. Both the
Asian culture and the Islamic religion entered a
great stage of revival and expansion which led to
an increase in their self-confidence. Asian
self-confidence was the result of rapid economic
growth and development while Islamic superiority
resulted from its population growth. Asian
Affirmation dealt with the economic development of
East Asia. It helped prove the wrong the idea that
Asia lacked the incentive and the means to
successfully become econo ...
Related: affirmation, asian, asian culture, asian development, islamic, islamic law, islamic religion

Australian Aborigines - 1,383 words
Australian Aborigines Until this paper, I never
even knew there was such a word as "Aborigine" let
alone it being a race of people dating back to the
prehistoric times. I thought that all Australians
were of Anglo decent, but I was wrong about that
assumption. The Aborigines were the first and only
inhabitants of Australia, until the late 18th
century when European settlers came. Because of
the Europeans, the Aborigines lives would change
drastically. In this paper, I am going to talk
about the Aborigines, describing their origins up
to the present. The Aborigines came originally
from somewhere in Asia and have been in Australia
for at least 40,000 years. The first settlement
occurred during ...
Related: aborigines, australian, australian aborigines, living conditions, daily life

Behind The Urals - 1,487 words
Behind The Urals Behind the Urals The United
States that we live in makes it very hard for us
to fathom what a struggling nation is like to live
in. In the United States, we are socialized to
believe that America is the most superior of all
the countries and our prosperity will continue to
grow. We are very fortunate to be born into a
relatively high standard of living as a society,
thus we cannot comprehend what it is like for
countries trying to build societies from the
bottom up. John Scott portrays this brilliantly in
his book Behind the Urals as he examines
individual people and their struggles as they
worked in Magnitogorsk. These citizens worked in
the most inhumane conditions, all wi ...
Related: soviet union, leadership skills, modern world, intention, scott

Black Plague - 1,553 words
... ercourse even if it wasnt prostetutional work.
I also left the clinic with a free supply of
various condoms, lubricants and spermicides along
with various literatures on condom ratings by
size, texture and price, and how to clean
intravenous needles with bleach. After several
questions regarding what the disease actually does
to the body, I realized that this woman was
unsure, and more interested in giving me a course
in sexual intercourse rather than my health. Also
she asked me about my relationships with friends
and family that were non- physical in anyway. I
was told that It was a potentially dangerous
factor that I had a brother (whom I havent resided
with for quit some years) that ...
Related: black plague, plague, weight loss, research paper, credible

Black Plague - 1,071 words
Black Plague Living in Europe in the middle of the
1300s would have been heartbreaking and dreadful.
Not only were the living conditions very poor but
there was an unknown disease that was wiping out a
large percentage of European population. One
cannot imagine the fear of wondering whether you
or someone you loved was going to catch this
deadly disease. No explanation would make a person
feel safe from catching it or dying with it. The
people of Europe just lived their lives as best
they could realizing that nothing they do could
ever stop this. They did not have the power to
stop this it was far too beyond them. This unknown
disease is known as the Bubonic Plague. The plague
was passed amo ...
Related: black death, black plague, bubonic plague, plague, living conditions

Buddhism - 1,715 words
... Buddha, he could establish a land free of all
suffering, where anyone with faith in him could be
reborn. Then he backed up this Great Universal Vow
with the massive power of innumerable virtues and
good deeds, which he performed over many eons of
time. Dharmakara successfully fulfilled his Great
Vow, and became Amida Buddha. In the Larger Pure
Land Sutra, which Shinran referred to in his
masterwork, the Kyogyoshinsho, as the True
Teaching, Sakyamuni describes in detail the
wondrous world in the western part of the universe
which Amida created, a world free from defilement
and pain. Amida says to us, in essence, "You who
rely on the saving power of my embrace, rather
than on your own sel ...
Related: buddhism, young children, self determination, cause and effect, runs

Business Course Assignment - 1,304 words
BUSINESS COURSE ASSIGNMENT FACTORS AFFECTING
LOCATION OF A CAR MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY Location:
Sao Paulo in Brazil Sao Paulo is a perfect
location for a car manufacturing industry. It is
situated on the coast of Brazil, and is near by to
local resources. The many reasons to why I have
chosen Sao Paulo and why it is suitable for a car
Manufacturing site are: 1. There is good access to
large amounts of cheap land 2. There is access to
cheap labour; Mexican immigrants and local
Brazilians 3. Near natural resources; large iron
and steel industry The Amazon forest which
supplies many resources , manganese, nickel,
timber, phosphates, platinum, tin, uranium,
petroleum 4. Good transport links; the ...
Related: assignment, good business, economic stability, steel industry, busy